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8/3/2019 G20 Heinbecker
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SPP Research PapersSPP Research Papers
Volume 4 Issue 5 May 2011
CANADAS WORLD CAN GET A LOT
BIGGER: The Group of 20, Global
Governance and Security
Paul Heinbecker
ABSTRACT
This paper examines the Group of 20 (the G-20)*
in the context of international
relations, especially the G-20s impact on global governance and international security,
and the G-20s significance for Canada and the conduct of Canadian foreign policy. It
will show that the G-20 embodies the changing way the world interacts and it will argue
that the group works and is needed, but that it can work better and become a more
important and more effective element of global management.
At the same time, the G-20 will not itself be sufficient to govern the world and should
not be judged harshly as a consequence. The group can complement but not replace
existing international organizations, especially the United Nations, although it can
provide impetus to their work and utilize their capacity, becoming, if G-20 members are
sufficiently sagacious, a key steering group of the network of organizations, institutions,
associations and treaties by which states govern relations amongst themselves. The
paper will also argue that if, as is likely, the G-20 endures, it will change the context in
which Canada pursues its foreign policy and change, as well, how that policy is
conducted, making the institution of prime minister even more paramount in the
pursuit of Canadian interests abroad and the protection of Canadian values than it hasyet become. More than ever, the prime minister will be the face and voice, indeed the
personification, of the government of Canada on the international stage.
*Paul Heinbecker is a Distinguished Fellow at the Centre for International GovernanceInnovation and inaugural Director of the Centre for Global Relations at LaurierUniversity; he is a former Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations.
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OVERVIEW AND EXECUTIVE SUMMARY*
It is early days to draw definitive conclusions about the future of the G-20. It has yet to
graduate fully from crisis response to agenda-setting, and from financial re-engineering to
global economic governance. Regenerating global economic growth and adopting financial
regulatory reforms to prevent a repeat of the worst economic crisis in nearly 100 years hasnecessarily remained the main task for the G-20, the self-appointed premier forum for
international economic cooperation. The impact of the G-20 on the management of global
financial affairs has been positive and significant, albeit not sufficient.
It is apparent already that the G-20 could do more, regarding both the international economy
and financial crisis and the major political and security issues of our times. Enlarging the
agenda is difficult for the group partly because the economic crisis is proving stubbornly
persistent, even if the depression wolf has been driven from the worlds door, and partly
because the groups members are not united either on the diagnosis of what is needed to put the
global economy on a strong, sustained growth path or on what a broader agenda would entail.
Some believe, as French President Nicolas Sarkozy, the next G-20 host, apparently does, thatthe world needs G-20 leaders to enlarge its agenda. There would potentially be value in the
G-20 addressing hybrid issues that have economic and other ramifications, such as climate
change and political/security issues, notably failing states, terrorism, UN reform, the Iranian
nuclear program, etc.
It remains to be seen whether common ground among the worlds most powerful leaders will
expand and a shared sense of responsibility for global governance will emerge as they address
themselves to the over-arching, sometimes zero-sum problems they face. It is not impossible
that in a smaller forum (smaller, that is, than the UN), their differences deriving from different
cultures, languages, experiences and economic philosophies will just be more starkly apparent
but little or no easier to resolve. So far there has apparently been some disposition to stake outpositions in the G-20 rather than to enter into cooperative problem solving. There is a risk that
if the expected benefits of small group dynamics are too slow to materialize, the G-20 will
become more a mini-UN than a macro-G-8. In that case, both the G-20 and the world body
would be the poorer. One of the most important global governance issues the world faces is the
quality and nature of the relationship between the nascent G-20 and the sexagenarian United
Nations; both are necessary but neither is sufficient and cooperation can bring synergies. It is
very much in everyones interests to work constructively for a more cooperative and productive
future for both. Further, it is in Canadas interests in particular to bend every effort to make the
G-20, which affords us extraordinary opportunities to promote and protect our interests,
successful.
* Other works by Paul Heinbecker in the same field include:The Future of the G-20 and Its P lace inGlobal Governance, Centre for International Governance Innovation, April 2011; The NewMultilateralism of the 21st Century w ith Fen Hampson in Global Governance, a Review ofMultilateralism and International Organizations, forthcoming, 2011 and The United Nations and theG-20: Synergy or Dissonance?, in Global Leadership in Transition: Making the G-20 More Effective andResponsive, Colin I. Bradford and Wonhyuk Lim (eds.), Brookings and the Korea Development Institute,Washington: Brookings Institut ion Press, June 2011.
The G-20 comprises Argentina, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Germany, France, India, Indonesia, Italy,Japan, Mex ico, Nigeria, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South A frica, South Korea, Turkey, the United States andthe United Kingdom. Spain is an unofficial member and the Netherlands has attended. The EU qua EU isrepresented. See the chart at the end of this paper for group memberships.
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CONCLUSIONS AND INSIGHTS
The G-20 and the Crisis
The Group of 20 heads of government came into being in 2008 because economic
catastrophe loomed, preventive action and remedial steps were urgently needed, and the
existing global governance organizations and institutions were unequal to the tasks. Aswell, the ground had been prepared for institutional innovation.
Notwithstanding sometimes warranted criticism, the G-20 countries have been successful in
averting grievous harm to the global economy including quite possibly a depression; they
have stuck tightly to their top priority of economic and financial reform.
The G-20 countries have been largely effective in financial re-engineering to mitigate the
crisis, although more remains to be done, notably with respect to implementing Basel III
banking reforms, providing the authority and resources required by the new Financial
Stability Board (FSB) and solving the issue of financial institutions that are too big to fail;
and carrying out and strengthening the Mutual Assessment Process (MAP), the backbone of
the Framework for Strong, Sustainable and Balanced Growth adopted at the PittsburghG-20 Summit in 2009.
The G-20 countries have done less well so far in addressing the highly political tasks of
resolving the current account, trade and budget imbalances conundrum, whose roots go
deep into the economic and political philosophies of the worlds largest economic players,
although thanks in part to Canadian brokering progress was made by G-20 finance
ministers in Paris in February in establishing criteria by which dangerous imbalances can be
measured and assessed.
The larger story of the G-20, including its much criticized performance at the Seoul
summit, is not that the G-20 is failing to resolve intractable issues but that the issues are
intractable and the G-20 is working on resolving them.
Absent the G-20, the world might find itself in a Smoot-Hawley environment and in
depression. In any case, there is no other forum where prospects for agreement are better.
The G-20 and Global Governance
The G-20 has not yet transformed itself from a global crisis response group to a global
steering group. Further, it still lacks consensus on the nature of what it is that ties members
together i.e., global interdependencies.
The G-20 will not in any case itself be sufficient to govern the world. Through cooperative,
transparent relationships, it can complement existing international organizations, not replace
them. There would be benefits if the G-20 countries broadened their agenda to address the worlds
most pressing hybrid issues such as the economic and financial dimensions of climate
change, along with non-economic issues, including global governance reform.
The exclusive nature of the group promotes efficiency but limits its effectiveness in rallying
wide-scale support for its decisions. It needs the cooperation of other bodies to extend its
reach.
A reciprocal, quality relationship between the nascent G-20 and the sexagenarian United
Nations is necessary. Both institutions are needed, neither is sufficient and cooperation
between the two is likely to yield synergies.
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The G-20 faces serious operational challenges deriving from diverse philosophies,
experiences, languages and cultures, as well as logistics that encumber the groups
effectiveness. However necessary, the cooperation of 20 sovereign and powerful countries
was never going to be easy or simple to achieve.
The G-20 will probably supplant the G-8, which might survive as a high-level dinner
meeting on the margins of other events. There will not be a G-2, and likely not a G-5, forthe same reasons that the G-8 is inadequate: the membership would be too narrow to solve
all problems on its own and insufficiently powerful to compel others cooperation.
The G-20 and Security
As most major states have too much at stake economically and socially to risk a role of the
military dice against each other, perhaps the most effective action the G-20 countries can
take to improve international security is to strengthen economic relations between them by
implementing their commitment to strong, sustainable and balanced economic growth.
To the extent the G-20 is successful in promoting an environment of trust in which all
acquire habits of cooperation, there will be spillover effects into security relations,reducing frictions between members and facilitating problem solving, as has been the case
in the past between Russia and the rest in the G-8, which could be especially beneficial for
the Asian members of the G-20 who have fewer effective organizations within which to
subsume their differences and work cooperatively.
If the G-8 experience is any guide, the G-20 leaders will sooner rather than later start to
consider political/security issues; if they dont, the G-20 might die of boredom!
To the extent that the G-20 qua G-20 will concern itself directly with security, it will likely
do so in response to phenomena such as organized crime and terrorism, although the threat
the latter poses is comparatively small (many more people died from extreme weather last
year than from terrorism cumulatively in the past 40 years).
We are entering into a time either of enhanced cooperative governance if we are wise or
zero-sum international competition if we are foolish; the G-20 could be decisive in
determining which it is to be.
The G-20 and Canada
If, as is likely, the G-20 endures, it will change the context in which Canada pursues its
foreign policy and become a major locus for the promotion and protection of Canadian
interests and values.
It will also change how Canadian foreign policy is conducted, becoming a vital avenue and
instrument for the pursuit of Canadian interests abroad and the protection of Canadianvalues.
More than ever, the prime minister will be the point man of Canadian high-level
diplomacy, becoming the face and voice, indeed the personification, of the Government of
Canada on the international stage.
The institution of prime minister will be thus even more paramount in the conduct of
Canadian foreign policy.
Canada should make the most of its membership in the G-20, and seek to broaden its
agenda to suit Canadian interests, especially as we will not be in the UN Security Council
for some years to come.
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THE INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT
Globalization continues to change our world before our eyes and, notwithstanding the constant
repetition of bad news by todays 24-hour news cycle, largely for the better. Since 1950, gross
world product has increased more than eightfold and average per capita income has more than
tripled. Since 1990, almost 500 million people have climbed out of poverty.1 Average life
expectancy has increased by almost 50 percent. The global literacy rate has increased from
56 percent in 1950 to 82 percent in 2004.2 Despite the predations of terrorism and the failing of
fragile states, the world remains largely at peace. According to a report of the independent UN
High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change in 2005, there were fewer interstate wars
between countries large or small in the second half of the 20th century than in the first half,
despite a nearly fourfold increase in the number of states.3 And the number of intra-state wars
declined dramatically since 1992, before increasing slightly since 2003.4
Most countries, including most major countries, increasingly put economic prosperity at the
heart of their foreign policy. The US is a major exception, although there are signs that hard
economic times and vast deficits are forcing reconsideration there too. Further, the sheer
destructiveness of contemporary military technology, even conventional technology, makes
war between major states increasingly irrational and improbable, except by inadvertence or
miscalculation. Most states have too much at stake economically and socially to risk a role of
the military dice.
People in almost every region are healthier, richer, better educated, more secure and better
connected electronicallyas well as more numerousthan ever before. More than two billion
people have access to the Internet, and more than five billion have access to cell phones, which
together are becoming a tool of democratization or, at least, public information and protest. 5
People are more and more linked to each other and have progressively greater access to
information, as the revolution in Cairos Tahrir Square showed. As a consequence, governing
this world presents challenges more complex than ever before. States remain predominant inglobal decision-making but technology is making it possible for more and more people to be
involved in the world beyond their borders and for more and more individuals and groups to
affect the environment in which states conduct their foreign (and national) policy. The same
phenomenon affects the operations of multilateral organizations.
1Sources: Compiled by Earth Policy Institute with 19501979 from Worldwatch Institute, Signposts 2001, cd-Rom
(Washington, DC: 2001) (Worldwatch update of Angus Maddison, Monitoring the World Economy 1820-1992 [Paris:
oecd, 1995]); 19802005 from International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook Database, at
www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/ weo/2006/02/data/index.htm, updated September 2006; United Nations, World
Population Prospects: The 2004 Revision (New York: 2005); U.S. Commerce Department, Bureau of Economic
Analysis, Implicit Price Deflators for Gross Domestic Product, Table 1.1.9, revised August 30, 2006, atwww.bea.gov; Unesco Institute for Statistics, Data on Illiteracy, for Population Age Fifteen and Older:
http://www.uis.unesco.org; Economic and Social council E/CN.9/2010/3, January 28, 2010.
2See the UNESCO Literacy Report 2008 http://www.uis.unesco.org/template/pdf/Literacy/LiteracyReport2008.pdf
3See A/59/565, A More Secure World: Our Shared Responsibility, Report of the High-Level Panel on Threats,
Challenges and Change, December 2, 2004, p 12.
*4
Human Security Report Project, Human Security Report 2009/2010: The Causes of Peace and the Shrinking Costs of
War. Pre-publication. Vancouver: HSRP, 2010. (Forthcoming in print from Oxford University Press Brief, Figure
10.1.
5The Digital Disruption: Connectivity and the Diffusion of Power, Eric Schmidt and Jared Cohen, Foreign Affairs,
November-December 2010.
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Although the US will long remain the pre-eminent state, Asian political and economic power is
growing perceptibly and the centre of economic gravity is shifting eastward, and southward.
China, though far behind the US by most economic, social and military measures, is making
rapid progress6, as are other emerging economies, with the result that in the decades ahead, no
country will determine unilaterally the course of world events. At the same time, competition
between states is at least as much economic as military in character, with the size of a statesGross Domestic Product (GDP) and its attractiveness to others in terms of quality of life
increasingly a currency of power and influence. We are entering into a time either of enhanced
cooperative governance if we are wise or zero-sum international competition if we are foolish.
The G-20 could be decisive in determining which it is to be.
The global institutions through which the world governs itself have been struggling for over a
generation to respond to the worlds rapidly changing expectations and demands. The UN, the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank have for some considerable time faced
challenges of effectiveness, efficiency and legitimacy as they have considered whether and how
to acknowledge the emergence of new powers and to accommodate growing popular
engagement. The G-8 has faced similar problems. The G-20, potentially the most importantinnovation in global governance since 1976, when the G-7 was formed, or even since the
creation of the UN and Bretton Woods institutions in the 1940s, is important both for what it
isa body whose membership is a frank acknowledgment of the power shifts underway in the
worldand for what it can potentially do to help world leaders cooperate to deliver effective
global leadership and governance, if those leaders have the wit and will to use it effectively and
creatively.
This paper will attempt to answer three key sets of questions:
How well is the G-20 doing, and what does the future likely hold for it? Will it complement
or conflict with the G-8, the UN and other global institutions with security avocations? Is the
G-20 still necessary?
What are the consequences of the G-20 for international politics and security likely to be?
How will all of this affect Canada, particularly Canadian foreign policy and what should
Canada do about it?
None of these questions can be answered confidently at this time and certainly not definitively,
but thinking about them now is essential to our adapting to a world that is changing rapidly.
6But according to Branko Milanovich in The Haves and Have-Nots, as quoted by Doug Sanders in the Globe and
Mail. January 22, 2011, Even as the Chinese worker has gone from $525 per year to $5,000 in two decades, the
average American worker has gone from about $25,000 to $38,000, the income gap has widened in favour of the
American.
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THE SHORT, LARGELY SUCCESSFUL, BUT SO FAR MOSTLY ECONOMIC, HISTORY OF
THE G-20
In international relations as in everything else, necessity is the mother of invention, timing is
everything, and opportunity comes to prepared minds. The G-20 heads of government came
into being in 2008 because economic catastrophe loomed, preventive action and remedial steps
were urgently needed and the existing world governance organizations and institutions were
unable to resolve the major financial issues that the highly innovative and equally reckless
American and European financial communities and their feckless regulators and overseers had
created in the preceding two decades. The G-20 also came into being because the ground had
been prepared for institutional innovation.
The G-20s Origins
The origins of the Group of 207are traceable to the successive financial crises at last centurys
endthe Mexican peso crisis, the Asian financial contagion and the Russian defaultwhen it
became clear that existing institutions were inadequate to meet the challenges they faced.
Then-finance minister Paul Martin and his US treasury secretary counterpart, LawrenceSummers, among others, recognized that the G-78 of leading industrial countries was unable to
respond effectively to financial crises because the governments seated around the table were
not able to carry out or enforce the decisions they made. Crucial players, capable of resisting
G-7 decisions or ignoring them altogether, were absent. To remedy the problem, Martin called
into being the G-20 finance ministers group, which thereafter met as an entity. In Martins
words in 2001, [n]obodys going to follow a G-7 dictate. They [the emerging powers and the
faltering economies] have got to be at the table and be part of the solution. 9 Further, even
though the G-20 represented the lions share of global GDP, large parts of the world were not
represented and the hope was that countries like South Africa, and others, would take a
leadership role in their regions, promoting best practices and sound policies.
As the heat of that financial moment cooled so, too, did the ardour of finance ministers fortheir G-20possibly a harbinger of things to come for prime ministers as the Western
Financial Crisis subsides. The G-20 finance ministers, as an institution, nevertheless endured,
and engaged in meaningful debate in a frank, informal manner, seeking consensus, building
habits of cooperation and creating personal relationships that were ready to be called on when
the time came to do so. When Martin subsequently became prime minister in 2003, he
perceived before many other leaders did the rapidity with which power realities in the world
were changing. To respond to the times, he called for upgrading the G-20 to the level of
leaders, and he also commissioned Canadian think tanks, notably the Centre for International
Governance Innovation (CIGI) in Waterloo and the Centre for Global Studies at the University
of Victoria, in cooperation with Brookings, Princeton, Oxford and others, to research the
modalities of such an upgrade. In 2005 he wrote that an effective new [leaders] group,focused on practical issues of global importance, is something that the world very much
needs.10
7For an interesting and detailed assessment of North-South relations, see Global Governance and Emerging
EconomiesAn Indian Perspective, by Shyam Saran, former Indian foreign secretary and national security adviser
of Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, 2010.
8The US, Germany, the UK, France, Italy, Japan and Canada.
9Interview with Paul Martin, Canadas Minister of Finance and Chair of the G-20 conducted by Candida Tamar
Paltiel, G-8 Research Group November 18, 2001, Ottawa.
10Paul Martin, Prime Minister of Canada, A Global Answer to Global Problems, Foreign Affairs, May/June 2005.
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It was an innovative idea whose time had not quite come, however, meeting inertia and even
resistance in several G-8 capitals and above all in Washington where president George W. Bush
was simply not interested in participating in one more multilateral summit group where US
power and freedom to maneuver would be constrained by combinations of others less
powerful. Further, most G-8 members were comfortable in their small, familiar, like-minded
group, where they could talk relatively freely with one another. Further, the prestige and thusdomestic partisan political advantage that such exclusivity appeared to confer were also
factors; better to be seen in the intimate company of the instantly recognizable (by the public)
powerful Western leaders than that of the less mdiatique arrivistes, to be a big fish in a
smaller pond. They preferred to enlarge their group informally, inviting other leaders, and
heads of international organizations, to join the proceedings only on issues for which their
presence could not be avoided. Various formulations were used, e.g., G-8 + others and G-8 +
G-5, all of which had the G-8 as the core.
At the same time, the emerging powers, especially China and Brazil, but also India and
Mexico, did not relish the idea of being outreach countries and were increasingly chafing at
G-8 expectations that they should be satisfied to wait in the corridors for a summons to join thetop table for figurative dessertand to share the tab for dinner. As their global significance
grew rapidly, their impatience with attending G-8 sessions only on the sufferance of their
betters grew apace. They formed their own counter-group, the G-5, a divisive development
that was likely to complicate global problem-solving rather than facilitate it. When
subsequently the G-20 leaders came into being, the five agreed among themselves that they
would not acquiesce in an organic link between the G-8 and G-20 processes11 (a decision that
was to cost Canada a pretty penny when summits had to be organized in Toronto as well as
Muskoka). The G-20 was to be new, one of the few international bodies in which the major
existing powers and the major emerging powers were to meet on the basis of formal equality,
unlike the UN Security Council with its permanent and non-permanent members or the major
international financial institutions, where voting power is weighted. Nor were caucuses of theeight and five to become the norm within the G-20, although the G-8 qua G-8 has continued to
meet separately.
As the financial system rapidly melted down in the fall of 2008, and as G-8 leaders, especially
those in Washington, peered into the economic abyss, all reticence about including the
emerging powers in their midst evaporated. The G-5, for its part, welcomed the idea of being
part of something that was not an appendage of the G-8. All eagerly grasped the ready-made
idea of the G-20, and president Bush, apparently at the urging of President Sarkozy of France,
convened the group in Washington to try to chart a course away from the precipice. Thus was
born the leaders G-20, a made-in-Canada idea, and foreign policy success, albeit not because
of any enthusiasm for it in Conservative-governed Ottawa after Martin left office. The G-8 wasat least initially Prime Minister Stephen Harpers preferred grouping.
11See Global Governance and Emerging Economies by Shyam Saran, former Indian Foreign Secretary and national
security adviser of Prime Minister Singh, 2010.
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The G-20 Record So Far
The G-20 as an entity has been effective and has the potential to be more so, although progress
on its economic agenda has slowed as it addresses domestically sensitive problems. It has met
five times since its inception in 2008 and has succeeded in pulling the world back from the
abyss of another Great Depression, undertaking some of the financial re-engineering needed toprevent a recurrence. The G-7 finance ministers and the G-20 leaders saved, not too strong a
word, the international financial system from collapse.
On October 10, 2008, facing the very real risk that markets would just not open on the
following Monday and that there would be a run on British banks, with demonstration effects
elsewhere, finance ministers including Canadas Jim Flaherty, agreed they would do whatever
it took to prevent the banks from defaulting, unfreeze credit and money markets, re-establish
lending, assure confidence in national deposit and guarantee programs and restart secondary
markets for mortgages and other securitized assets. Fortunately, it largely worked.
At the Washington G-20 meeting a few weeks later, heads of governments signaled, Apollo 13-
like, that they recognized that the world had a problem and pledged to work cooperatively to
address it. All leaders agreed to take steps to unfreeze credit, fix their banks (Canada was
exempted), launch financial reforms, avoid protectionism and stimulate their economies. At the
next meeting in London in the spring, leaders undertook to pump large sumsa trillion dollars,
using creative accountinginto the international economy through the IMF and other
International Financial Institutions (IFIs), to the benefit largely of the large emerging
economies. Leaders effectively reversed the descent into economic depression, launching
reform of the international financial regulatory system, modernizing international financial
institutions and undertaking to recognize in structural terms the growing power and influence
of the emerging market countries. They created the FSB12, a potentially major international
institutional innovation, intended to provide better international oversight of the financial
system and develop capital and liquidity standards for systemically important financial
institutions.
In Pittsburgh in the fall, as the danger of a depression receded, the leaders proclaimed the G-20
as the primary institution for [their] economic cooperation13 and charted the transition from
crisis to recovery with the Framework for Strong, Sustainable and Balanced Growth (FSSBG),
commissioning work on what had to be done to achieve a new balanced growth model in the
future.
In Toronto the following June, Canadas game plan was for the G-20 to concentrate on meeting
past commitments on the core agenda, and to hand off progress to Seoul. Ottawa focused the
summit agenda on four critical areas:
Supporting the recovery and laying the foundations for the FSSBG.
Following through on required reforms to the regulation and management of financial
sectors.
12Global Plan for Recovery and Reform (02/04/2009), the official communiqu issued of the G-20 London Summit.
13Pittsburgh Communiqu.
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Strengthening international financial institutions, particularly the World Bank and the IMF,
through reforms to their governance and strengthening of their resources.
Resisting protectionism and seeking enhanced liberalization of trade and investment.14
Leaders found themselves having to respond to the suddenly urgent sovereign debt crisis in
Europe triggered by Greece. Prime Minister Harper, who had earlier written to other leadersabout deficits, proposed precise targets for winding them down. With his counterparts from
Britain, Germany and France, he favoured sending the markets a signal of fiscal consolidation,
i.e., that leaders understood that they needed to rein in unsustainable deficits and public debt in
advanced economies, although they also recognized that such consolidation had to be balanced
against the continuing implementation of fiscal stimulus in some countries and a rebalancing in
global demand, with a particular emphasis on emerging economies to offset the slower growth
in the developed world.
US President Barack Obama, for his part, worried that the recovery was not yet self-sustaining
and emphasized, therefore, leaving the door open to increased stimulus spending, the large
government deficits notwithstanding. Ultimately, G-20 leaders under Harpers chairmanshipeffectively decided to do both, agreeing that they would complete their planned fiscal stimulus
programs, but also setting targets of a 50 percent deficit reduction by 2013 and a stabilized or
improving debt-to-GDP ratio by 2016, thereby sending a clear signal to markets that they
recognized that budget deficits could not go on forever. The British had already moved to cut
spending in order to get their fiscal books in order and others promised to do so. Others,
especially the newly emerging economies, argued that they didnt have a deficit and debt
problem and that they needed to continue to spend on development; in any case, the countries
that had caused the crisis should get their own houses in order first. The emerging economies
were effectively excused from the deal, as were the Japanese whose fiscal problems were put
in the too difficult category. To block a British, French and German push for an international
bank tax that would have unfairly burdened Canadian banks, which had not been part of theproblem, the Harper government actively sought allies and made common cause with some of
the emerging economies, notably China and India.
In Toronto, leaders also made progress on the goal of financial sector reform. In particular,
leaders agreed on the need to recalibrate upwards requirements regarding the amount and
quality of capital held by banks. Leaders agreed on the importance of creating a strong
regulatory framework, including the need to create a more effective system for oversight and
intervention. Whether the major powers will heed such advice is an open question.
In Toronto, the G-20 was also able to deliver on a number of earlier commitments, including
ensuring $350 billion in general capital increases for multilateral development banks, which
would allow them to nearly double their lending. The group also endorsed recent reforms at the
World Bank and called for an acceleration of efforts to advance additional quota and
governance reforms at the IMF to reflect changed reality. On both quotas and voice, leaders
recognized that the situation at the IMF, with its northern and western, especially European,
over-representation, remained inequitable, seriously undermining the legitimacy of the
14Len Edwards, Canadian Sherpa, speech to the Annual General Meeting of the Korea-Canada Society, Ottawa,
November 3, 2010.
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organization and support for it in the rest of the world. Leaders also renewed their commitment
to avoid protectionism and to conclude the Doha Development Round of trade negotiations.15
Perhaps as a consequence, protectionism has not disappeared but has arguably not been as bad
a problem as it might otherwise have been. Completing the Doha negotiations remains,
however, in the realm of good intentions. Overall, the G-20 took forward its core agenda,
dealt with the sovereign debt crisis, and put in train work for Seoul and beyond.
Following Toronto, Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney commented that successful
implementation of the G-20 financial reform agenda, when combined with the peer review
process of the FSB and external reviews by the IMF, should increase actual and perceived
systemic stability. At the same time, he warned that while the right promises had been made,
implementation was less encouraging.16 It was evident already then that the G-20 was
becoming a victim of its own success, having achieved enough progress to lessen the urgency
of going further, and thereby taking at least some of the drive out of the financial reform effort.
In the lead-up to Seoul, the G-20 struggled to come to grips with currency valuation and credit-
easing policies and their significance for current account and trade imbalances. The US and
others, including Canada, took one side and China and Germany took another, with the US
blaming China for currency manipulation to maintain its export-led growth, China criticizing
the US for unilaterally creating excessive credit through quantitative easing and some other
countries openly or covertly agreeing with one or the other or both. It is a sign of how
tendentious discussions among the group had become on monetary policy that the veteran and
very sober German politician and Finance Minister Wolfgang Schuble characterized US
policy as cluelessnot the usual vocabulary used in these august circlesfor, in his
judgment, pumping too much financial liquidity into the market which would destabilize some
countries financial systems and risk provoking international defensive responses. South
African Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan warned that developing countries, including South
Africa, would bear the brunt of the US decision to open its flood gates which underminesthe spirit of multilateral co-operation that G-20 leaders [] fought so hard to maintain during
the current crisis. Brazils Finance Minister, Guido Mantega, warned that the US move would
hurt Brazil and other exporters. China asked for an explanation.17
Policy responses to the imbalances were creating strange, or at least, new, bedfellows.
In Seoul, the cracks in solidarity evident in Toronto on the causes of trade and current account
imbalances and on currency values became fissures. The group effectively split several ways
on this issue, but did manage to establish a 2011 target for agreeing on indicative guidelines
by which to assess imbalances and to consider what, if anything, to do about them. Harper and
Prime Minister Manmohan Singh of India were tasked with providing ideas. G-20 countries
were able to agree on the need for new financial rules to render the international financial
15Prime Minister Stephen Harper, From Canada to Korea: Advancing Global Leadership through the G-8 and G-20
in G-20 the Seoul Summit, November, the G-20 Research Group Munk Centre for International Studies, University
of Toronto, 2010.
16Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carneys speech, Sep 10, 2010.
17China, Germany and South Africa criticize US stimulus, BBC Business News, 5 November 2010.
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system more resilient, reduce the moral hazard of major financial institutions relying on
governments to bail them out, limit the buildup of systemic risk and support stable economic
growth.18 The G-20 adopted new capital and liquidity requirements for banks that will,
however, only be implemented starting on January 1, 2013 and only fully phased in by January
1, 2019, ostensibly out of concerns for constricting lending and thereby aborting the recovery,
but likely also because of the effective lobbying by Wall Street in Washington. Priorityattention was also given to the regulation of commodity derivatives markets, which have been
blamed for commodity price volatility and the food crisis of 2008.
The Seoul summit will likely be remembered for registering the importance of the emerging
economies in the G-20, both by virtue of its non-G-8 locus and by the shift in the content of
the agenda. Thanks mainly to Korean leadership, development in the sense of economic
growth, rather than the traditional donor-recipient paradigm was added to the G-20 agenda.
Seoul also put the issue of cross-border capital flows on the G-20 macro-prudential regulatory
agenda, advocating the creation of financial safety nets to safeguard smaller states from
volatile financial flows and obviate the need for the self-insurance of large reserves, which
contribute to the imbalances problem.
At Seoul, G-20 leaders endorsed IMF reforms that will give developing countries greater
influence in the institution. China will become the third largest IMF shareholder, bypassing
Germany, as part of an overall six percent transfer of voting power to dynamic and
underrepresented economies. Progress in reforming the IMF has been made, but a clear and
widely shared view on the appropriate role and functioning of the IMF remains, nevertheless,
elusive. In some respects, the IMF has progressed from acquiescing in G-8, especially
American, views to acquiescing in G-20 views; progress of a sort. The willingness of the major
economies to heed the IMF remains sketchy.
THE FUTURE OF THE G-20 AND ITS PLACE IN GLOBAL GOVERNANCE
The G-20: A Work in Progress
Because of the currency and liquidity disputes, the general public perception of the results of
Seoul was negative, even if progress was made on a number of key issues (IMF reform,
financial regulation, development, etc.). In the Spring of 2011, according to the Financial
Times, Reuters, the Globe and Mail and others, finance ministers and central bankers made
progress in reconciling the divergent views of the US, which has the worlds largest trade
deficit, with those of China and Germany, who have the two largest surpluses, on establishing
indicators of the causes of the imbalances, and in financial reform challenges remain,
especially as regards reserve currencies and capital market volatility as well as cross-border
financial institutions being too big to fail and the need to give the new FSB the authority and
capacity to do its job effectively. They, also, agreed that G-20 countries accounting for more
than five percent of G-20 GDP (on market exchange rates or purchasing power parity exchange
rates) will be reviewed, reflecting the greater potential for spillover effects from larger
economies. (Financial Times, April 2011).
18Prime Minister Lee Myung-bak, President, Republic of Korea, in G-20 the Seoul Summit, the G-20 Research Group
Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, November 2011.
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The Washington summit communiqu foresaw addressing other critical challenges such as
fossil fuel subsidies, energy security and climate change, food security, rule of law, and the
fight against terrorism, poverty and disease.19 There is also a need for the international
community to address water scarcity, reform of the UN Security Council and arms control. The
G-20 has, nevertheless, stuck close to its self-prescribed economic and financial mandate.
For everyones sake, G-20 leaders do have to get the economics and financial issues right, as
well as the related reforms to the governing rules and regulations. Undoubtedly, the group will
be judged primarily on its success in re-engineering the financial system to preclude as much
as possible recourse to risky financial practices that can bring the entire world to the brink of
economic disaster. But over time, and likely not very much time, G-20 leaders will probably
complement their financial and economic agenda with deliberations on other issues that require
their attention. Experience derived from the G-8 has been that when leaders come together, the
temptation is irresistible to take advantage of each others presence to discuss the pressing
issues of the day, whatever they are and whatever the agenda of the meeting they are attending
may be. Nor do most (perhaps not including Harper, who regards himself as an economist)
want to delve too deeply into the technical details of international finance, preferring to leavethat task to finance ministers and national bank governors.
The next G-20 summit will be held in France, and its host, Sarkozy, speaking before an annual
gathering of French ambassadors in July 2010 signaled his preference for an expansive agenda:
now that relative calm has returned, there is a temptation to
limit the G-20s ambitions to implementing its decisions,
supplementing them in 2011 by expanding regulation where it
remains insufficient, verifying the implementation of tax exchange
information agreements, adopting strong measures to fight
corruption, strengthening the mandate of the Financial Stability
Board and, more broadly, re-examining the prudential framework ofbanking institutions to avoid a repetition of the recent crisis.
Completing the work that is under way is importantthe G-20s
credibility depends on it. But is it enough?20
He then answered his own question, asserting that sticking with this agenda would condemn
the G-20 to failure and the world to new crises. It would also condemn the world to cope with
its major governance problems using organizations and institutions that were created in other
times, partly at least to address other issues.
In January 2011, Sarkozy refined his priorities for the next summit in Cannes, identifying three
overall priorities that France would invite G-20 leaders to address, namely:
1. Continuing reform of the international monetary system to ensure that the decisions taken at
the last five G-20 summits are put into practice, particularly as regards financial regulation,
greater stability of the international monetary system, volatility in currency values, volatile
capital flows that destabilize developing economies as well as indicators to measure global
economic imbalances.
19Declaration of the Summit on Financial Markets and the World Economy, Washington, November 15, 2008.
20President Nicholas Sarkozy, adapted from an address to the 18th Ambassadors Conference, 25 August 2010, Elyse
Palace, Paris.
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2. The need to control the volatility of commodity prices, including oil and agricultural
products, notably wheat (commodities of particular interest to Canada, especially to
Western Canada), possibly through a code of conduct on food aid and emergency stocks.
3. Reform of global governance.
On the last, Sarkozys ambitions stretch from creating a G-20 secretariat to promotinginnovative financing for development such as some version of the Tobin tax on international
financial transfers, giving the International Labour Organization (ILO) more weight in global
governance, setting up a minimum standard of universal social protection, fulfilling financial
commitments on climate change (the G-20 summit in France will be held just before the 2011
UN climate change conference in Durban, South Africa) and infrastructure projects in Africa.
UN reform, particularly UN Security Council reform, which had earlier been an explicit part of
the French governance reform package, appears to have been regrettably put on the back burner.
Whether and how far the other G-20 leaders will wish to accompany the French president in
pursuing such an ambitious and wide-ranging agenda remains to be seen. Progress will not in
any event come easily. Conflicting national interests lie behind all of the issues that he
enumerated, not least currency values and commodity price volatility, climate change andinternational institutional reform. The group is unlikely to be a panacea for all that ails the
world, but it is potentially important.
The G-20 and the G-8: Redundant or Complementary?21
The Canadian government has been one of the principal defenders of the ongoing utility of the
G-8, with Harper arguing that the G-8 and G-20 have distinct but complementary roles to play.
He apparently sees the G-20 as focusing on finance and economics and the G-8 on democracy,
development assistance (it was at Huntsville that Harper promoted the multi-billion dollar
initiative on maternal and childrens health22) and peace and security.23
Not everyone is convinced by the logic of these divisions, especially as regards economics and
development, as China, India, Brazil and South Africa are deeply involved economically in the
Third World. Non-G-8 members of the G-20 are skeptical of the need for the continuing
existence of the G-8, even wary of it. G-8 members seem generally disposed to continue the
G-8s existence although some, including particularly Obama, have expressed doubts. Sarkozy,
the host of the next G-8 in 2011, seems noncommittal, remarking to the gathering of French
ambassadors last summer that while France would prepare the next G-8 summit with the
requisite care, some have said [the G-8] is condemned. Others believe it has a rosy future if
it refocuses on security issues and its partnership with Africa. The future will decide.24
21For a fuller treatment of the relationship of the G-8 and the G-20, see Canada, the G-8 and the G-20: A Canadian
Approach to Shaping Global Governance in a Shifting International Environment, by Gordon S. Smith and Peter
Heap, SPP Research Papers, The School of Public Policy, Volume 3, Issue 8, November 2010
22The Canadian initiative succeeded in attracting quite substantial fundingpledges equaled $ 7.3 billionbut also
drew the ire of some of our partners, notably the Americans, for our determination to exclude funding for abortion, a
policy posture that had earlier been adopted by the Bush administration, but explicitly rejected by the Obama
administration. US Secretary of State Hilary Clinton specifically and publicly criticized this dimension of the Harper
governments initiative. The communiqu papered over the cracks.
23Statement by the Prime Minister of Canada, Stephen Harper, at the 2010 World Economic Forum, Davos,
Switzerland, January 28, 2010. See also the article by Prime Minister Harper, in G-20 the Seoul Summit, the G-20
Research Group, Munk Centre for International Studies, University of Toronto, November 2010.
24President Nicholas Sarkozy, adapted from an address to the 18th Ambassadors Conference, 25 August 2010, Elyse
Palace, Paris.
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It does seem very likely that the G-8 will not in future meet in tandem with the G-20, given the
antipathy to it of the non-G-8 members of the G-20. The G-8 might well become little more
than a high-level dinner club that meets on the margins of the UN General Debate in New York
each fall, which all of its members usually attend anyway. This would keep the group alive and
allow its members to compare notes on issues of interest, and do so at vastly lower cost, not a
trivial consideration at a time of soaring budget deficits.
Ultimately the G-20 seems destined to supplant the G-8. The time demands of summit
diplomacyexceeding a dozen gatherings per year and more for some leadersas well as the
wear and tear on leaders of travel across time zones and the impatience of those leaders with
redundancies of forums and issues, militate in favour of dispensing with the G-8. For example,
at Huntsville and Toronto, both the G-8 and the G-20 addressed themselves to Haitis
problems, with the G-8 discussing Haitis security needs and the G-20 focusing on economic
challenges. Had there been the will to do so, some moderately agile drafting would have made
it possible to address these issues in one session. Unless the G-20 falls into deadlock, the odds
are that the G-8 will go the way of the Group of Major Emitting Countries, which has near
identical membership to the G-20, and which has not met since the LAquila, Italy summit in2009.
THE G-20 AND THE UNITED NATIONS
One of the most important governance questions facing the international community is what
the relationship is to be between the G-20 and the UN. Both are creatures of the wills of their
member states, and are in some respects complementary instruments for promoting global
governance and international cooperation, and, in other respects, potentially competitive. As
and when the G-20 enters the international political domain, it has the ability to assist the UN
to come to grips with intractable global problems, notably climate change, by importing greater
consensus into UN deliberations. It can also impart a reform trajectory to the UN that is
difficult to generate otherwise. The UN, for its part, can extend the G-20s effectiveness,
ratifying G-20 decisions and thus lending greater legitimacy to them. Getting the relationship
between the G-20 and the UN right holds the prospect of considerable benefits all round.
The Enduring Value of the UN25
The UN Charter provides the rule book for the conduct of international relations which all
states, including G-20 states, usually see it as in their interest to respectand have respected.
If the UN didnt exist, to quote the old clich, the world would have to invent it, if the worldcould marshal the political will to do so in the absence of a stimulus as powerful as the Second
World War.
25For a fuller treatment of the United Nations, see Paul Heinbecker, Getting Back in the Game; a Foreign Policy
Playbook for Canada, Key Porter, 2010, from which some of this line of argument is derived.
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An underappreciated reality is that the UN is a kind of motherboard of global governance,
performing its own core functions but also enabling other entities, for example, UNICEF, to
work better as well. Were there no UN with its universal membership, the restrictive G-20
would be much more controversial and its decisions much more contestedand resented.
NATO, for its part, needs the UN to certify the legitimacy of its operations in, for example,
Afghanistan and Libya, and to complement NATOs military efforts there with civiliandevelopment programs. The UN also makes it possible for initiatives such as the Millennium
Development Goals (MDG) to be sub-contracted out efficiently. The reverse is also true. The
products of other entities, potentially including the G-20, are imported into the UN for
consideration by its larger membership and where possible endorsement, as the Ottawa Treaty
on anti-personnel landmines, the Responsibility to Protect and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS,
Tuberculosis and Malaria have been. From peacekeeping, peace enforcement and peace-
building to international criminal justice systems, sustainable development, refugee protection,
humanitarian coordination and food relief, democracy and electoral support, human rights
conventions, health protection, landmine removal and managerial accountability and oversight,
the organization has been innovating and equipping itself to acquit its increasingly demanding
responsibilities. As a consequence, the UN has a broader presence in the world than any otherorganization except the United States, and much substantive expertise in dealing with
contemporary challenges, such as instability, fragile states and natural disasters.
The results of the UNs efforts are impressiveand vital. In 2009, the UN High Commissioner
for Refugees protected 36 million peopleequivalent to more than the population of Canada
including refugees, the stateless, the internally displaced, returnees and asylum-seekers. 26 In
2009, the World Food Program (WFP), operating in 75 countries, fed almost 102 million
people,27which is more than three times the population of Canada. The World Health
Organization (WHO), which, in its earlier years, led the successful program to eradicate
smallpox, is now close to eliminating poliomyelitis. As a consequence of the work of the
WHO and its private partners, including Rotary International, polio infections have fallen by
99 percent since 1988, and some five million people have been spared paralysis. With the
assistance of the WHO and UNICEF, the immunization of children for the six major vaccine-
preventable diseasespertussis, childhood tuberculosis, tetanus, polio, measles and
diphtheriahas risen dramatically. For example, about 20 percent of the worlds children had
been inoculated in 1980 for measles; the figure by the end of 2009 was an estimated
82 percent28; at least 90 percent will be immunized by 2015, the target date of the MDG.
Global coverage of infants for hepatitis B in 1990 was one percent; in 2009 it was 70 percent. 29
Meanwhile, the WHO has also been coordinating the worlds response to SARS, the avian flu
and the H1N1 virus. This work has been belittled in some unenlightened quarters as mere
international social work. It is social work, but it delivers very real human and national security
benefits, which the G-20 is unequipped to deliver.
26UNHCR http://www.unhcr.org/pages/4a0174156.html, Table 22. Refugees, asylum-seekers, internally displaced
persons (IDPs), returnees (refugees and IDPs), stateless persons, and others of concern to UNHCR by region, 2008-
2009.
27WFP Annual Report 2010
http://documents.wfp.org/stellent/groups/public/documents/communications/wfp220666.pdf
28Deaths from measles, a major killer, declined by 74 percent worldwide and by 89 percent in Sub-Saharan Africa
between 2000 and 2007.
29See Global Immunization Data, based on the latest World Health Organization (WHO)/UNICEF global estimates
for 2009, October 2010.
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At the same time, the United Nations suffers from problems that have accumulated since 1945.
Disagreements, often grounded in genuine differences of interests, persist between the rich
northern countries and the Group of 77 (G-77), between the permanent five members of the
Security Council and the rest, between climate changers and climate victims, between Israelis
and Arabs and Muslims more generally, between Indians and Pakistanis and between North
Korea and South Korea and the US, etc. These various disputes and failures hinder the UNseffectiveness and, as a consequence, diminish its efficacy.
Similarities and Differences, Complementarities and Dissonances30
The UN is an organization with a written charter endorsed by 192 countries, an extensive body
of international law and rules created under its auspices by its members, a General Assembly of
member states, a Security Council, an international court, a Secretary-General and a
professional secretariat of 63,45031, including the staff of the World Bank, the IMF and a
constellation of related organizations, councils, tribunals, commissions, funds and agencies.
Just under 100,000 soldiers and police serve under the UN flag in 15 current operations.32
Housed in an iconic building on the East River in New York, the UN disposes of a combinedannual budget of about $10 billion in contributions from its member countries (Canada pays
about 3 percent) to support its operations, a modest cost compared to the budgets of most
governments; the Canadian federal budget totals approximately $260 billion33.
The UNs legitimacy is derived essentially from the adherence of its 192 states members to the
UN Charter and from the work the world body performs on behalf of its members around the
world. A web of several hundred treaties negotiated under UN auspices gives expression to the
wishes of its members and helps to regulate the behaviour of governments towards each other
and towards their own people. The UN meets at the level of Permanent Representatives and
other diplomats and is in near-constant session, addressing an open-ended agenda that extends
from peace and war to economic and social development. Leaders from around the worldparticipate in large numbers (over 150 in 2005, for example) in the annual General Debate in
the General Assembly each September and in occasional, quite exceptional Security Council
sessions. For example, in September 2009, Obama convened the Security Council at heads of
state and government level to promote progress on nuclear arms control and disarmament.
The G-20, by contrast, is more virtual than concrete, has no international legal personality, is
not an organization at all and is scarcely an institution. It has no charter, no brick and mortar
assets, no standing secretariat thus far (continuity is theoretically assured by a troika of
immediately previous, current and next host countries) and no research capacity beyond that
which its member states and international organizations supply. The G-20s work is supported
professionally by the World Bank, the IMF, the Organization for Economic Co-operation andDevelopment (OECD), the ILO, the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the UN.
30For fuller treatment of this subject, see Making Multilateralism Work: How the G-20 Can Help the United Nations,
by Bruce Jones, Director, Managing Global Insecurity, Brookings for The Stanley Foundation, April 2010 and The
G-20: Shifting Coalitions of Consensus Rather Than Blocs, by Stewart Patrick, Council on Foreign Relations,
presented at the G-20 Seoul International Symposium, September, 010.
31UN Website, January 2010.
32See Monthly Summary Of Military And Police, Contribution To United Nations Operations, UN Website, January,2011.
33See Treasury Board, Government of Canada, Main Estimates 2010-11.
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The G-20 also works with the new FSB to address vulnerabilities, to develop and implement
strong regulatory, supervisory and other policies in the interest of financial stability and to
monitor and report on progress in strengthening financial regulation. The G-20 has set up a
large number of working and expert groups, each co-chaired by a G-8 member and an
emerging economy country,34 covering a range of mainly economic issues in considerable
detail. Fundamentally though, the G-20s effectiveness depends on the exceptional internationalstanding of its members, who number most of the most powerful countries on earth, on the
strength of the consensus they can fashion on given issues and on their willingness to act in
concert to give expression to that consensus.
The G-20s legitimacy derives from its success in redressing the crucial economic and financial
crises of 2008-9. It also derives from the fact that its membership accounts for 90 percent of
global Gross National Product (GNP), 80 percent of world trade and 67 percent of the planets
total population. The G-20 has no budget, but its members have shown they are capable of
committing truly vast resources under its auspices if circumstances warrant. These
characteristics do not confer the legitimacy inherent in universality, but nor are they trivial.
When the G-20 reaches agreement, a large part of whatever problem it is addressing is on theway to resolution.
The G-20s effectiveness is immeasurably enhanced by virtue of the fact that it meets at the
level of heads of government, who are far removed from the hothouse of the UN General
Assembly and the antique ideologies, accumulated grievances, diplomatic pathologies and
institutional inertias that sometimes impede progress there. At the same time, while G-20
members can bind themselves individually and collectively, if they can reach agreement among
themselves, they cannot bind others. They need to work through more universal bodies,
including, ultimately, the UN, to get their decisions endorsed by non-G-20 member countries.
Although the UN works best when consensus reigns among the major powers, the latter are
often at loggerheads in the organization. It is not always clear whether it is the intractability of
the problems the UN handles that causes divisions, or the UNs divisions that make the
problems intractable. In any case, the countries of the North and the countries of the
overlapping Non-Aligned Movement and G-77 are often at ideological odds with each other
and working to cross-purposes. Unlike the G-8, the G-20 members have the built-in advantage
of spanning the infamous North-South divide, its members having places in the UNs disparate
political groups and in all five geographic regions, as well. The G-20 could make a major
contribution to improving the effectiveness of the UN if it could iron out some of the
differences that divide its members and import that agreement into UN deliberations.
To the extent, therefore, that G-20 membership induces a sense of common purpose among the
20 and diminishes its members identification with geographic or other groups, cooperationunder UN auspices would be made easier and more productive. As has been the case in the
IMF, consensus by the G-20 on a particular need could be a powerful stimulus to action and
reform at the UN in New York. Conversely, the very existence of the G-20 and its evident
capacity to act outside of UN parameters if non-G-20 UN members are dilatory or obstructive,
create an incentive in New York for action and cooperation. Those who cling in New York to
ideological positions could find the organization they are obstructing bypassed altogether.
34Government of Canada website, updated 2010-08-31.
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Not surprisingly, much of the UNs membership is apprehensive of the G-20. They recognize
that the G-20 came into existence when and how it did because a myriad of political and
structural problems prevented existing institutions, principally the G-8 and the IMF, but also
the UN proper, from addressing the global financial crisis effectively. They realize that similar
impediments are obstructing progress on other global issues more directly under the UNs
purview and they are well aware that the G-20 is capable of sidestepping the UN whendisagreements prevent effective action.
At the same time, they are troubled by the G-20s structural shortcomings. Despite the presence
at the G-20 table of some developing countries, no place is reserved for the poorest, least
developed countries and no one is carrying their proxies. Also problematic, the capable smaller
countries of the UN such as Norway, Switzerland, Chile, Singapore and New Zealand, are
absent from G-20 tables as well, effectively depriving G-20 deliberations of these countries
generally constructive and frequently innovative diplomacy. The Norwegian Foreign Minister,
Jonas Gahr Store, who presides over one of the most widely respected and effective small
country diplomacies in the world, said bluntly in the lead-up to the Toronto and Muskoka
summits last year that the spirit of the Congress of Vienna, where great powers assembled toeffectively govern the world, has no place in the contemporary international community. The
G-20 is sorely lacking in legitimacy and must change. While acknowledging that there is
value in having an effective, smaller forum of nations, equipped to act quickly when
necessary, he warned that if the G-20 cooperation should effectively result in decisions being
imposed on the great majority of other countries, it will quickly find itself stymied. 35
Singapores Permanent Representative, Vanu Gopala Menon, speaking on behalf of the Global
Governance Group, an informal group of moderate countries who have joined forces in the
hope of developing a constructive dialogue on coordination and cooperation between G-20 and
non G-20 members, made much the same point:
We firmly believe that the G-20 process should enhance and not
undermine the UN. All countries, big and small, will be affected by
how the G-20 deals with the issues it takes under its charge. Given
the complexities and interdependencies of the global economy, it is
important for the G-20 to be consultative, inclusive and transparent
in its deliberations for its outcome to be effectively implemented on
a global scale.36
It is in the interest of the countries of the G-20 to work out an effective relationship with the
G-172 (i.e., the UN members not also members of the G-20) because the more the 172 are
excluded, the less they will have confidence in the ultimate fairness and efficacy of the
multilateral system, and the less interest they will have in responding to G-20 wishes. Globalproblems require global solutions and, as Bruce Jones of Brookings has pointed out, however
much influence the G-20 have, the problems they confront are the kind where the weakest link
35Jonas Gahr Store, G-20 sorely lacking in legitimacy New Straits Times, Mar 29, 2010.
36Statement By Ambassador Vanu Gopala Menon, Permanent Representative Of Singapore to the United Nations On
Behalf Of The Global Governance Group (3G) At The Meeting Of The Ad Hoc Open-Ended Working Group to
Follow Up on the Conference Last June of the World Financial And Economic Crisis and its Impact on
Development. Strengthening The Role Of The UN In Global Economic Governance, 2 June 2010.
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can break the chain.37Unless smaller states see their views reflected in decision-making
processes, or at least judge that their interests have been duly and fairly taken into account,
they are unlikely to buy into the solution of whatever is at issue. This kind of
unresponsiveness can have repercussions in, for example, the G-172s attitudes towards illegal
migration, transnational crime and the drug trade, international terrorism and piracy, evasion by
unscrupulous industries of climate change regulations, the prevention of the spread ofpandemics of infectious disease, and collaboration on financial regulation notably regarding tax
havens and banking reforms, and so on.
The G-20 needs to take outreach seriously, in ways consistent with efficacy and inclusion as
well. There are several steps the G-20 can take, none of which will be fully satisfactory to
those who are absent, but all of which are likely to be better than nothing. Most fundamentally,
the chair of the G-20 in a given year will need to consult others beyond his/her G-20
counterparts on the G-20 agenda and seek substantive rather than pro forma input through, for
example, the African Union (AU), ASEAN, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, the Gulf
Cooperation Council, the Organization of American States, etc.
A further idea is to adopt at least an informal constituency approach, so that G-20 leaders at the
table, or some of them, carry de facto proxies of those not present. Canada and the UK could,
for example, represent the Commonwealth. Canada and France could do the same for the
Francophonie while Mexico and Brazil could carry briefs for Latin America, etc. This would
imply effective consultation with members of the constituency before G-20 meetings and
timely debriefings and cooperation afterwards. A variation on this idea is that G-20 finance
ministers should form a council to take strategic decisions on the international monetary
system, effectively replacing the IMF monetary and financial committee, with each G-20
country representing a constituency of smaller countries, mirroring the IMFs system of
constituencies.38 At the same time, the more effectively the G-20 worked with the UN, the less
need there would be for outreach and for G-20 members to try to represent constituencies,informal or otherwise.
In order to ensure a voice for the G-172 at the G-20 table, especially for the poorest, the UN
Secretary-General could attend the G-20 as a matter of right, as could the heads of the IMF and
the head of the World Bank when economic issues were on the agenda. While the Secretary-
General works for the G-20 as well as the G-172, it is in the latter capacity that he/she can give
voice to the absent. As is the case with the EU, the AU and any other transcendent political
unions could attend as a matter of convention. Further, the UN (and the Bretton Woods
organizations) could be encouraged to contribute their perspectives and ideas at G-20
preparatory ministerial meetings and working groups.
There are numerous global issues on which the G-20 and the UN can help each other, but two
stand out: Security Council reform and climate change.
37Bruce Jones, , Policy Brief, Stanley Foundation, Making Multilateralism Work: How the Can Help the United
Nations April 2010.
38See Peggy Hollinger, Financial Times, Wednesday February 9, 2011.
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The G-20 and Reform of the Security Council.
The UN Security Council is the worlds top security table. It is empowered under Chapter VI
and VII of the UN Charter to authorize the use of force, the only international body that has
that legal right. Signatories of the North Atlantic Treaty pay due deference to the UN Charter
and undertake under its Article I to refrain in their international relations from the threat or
use of force in any manner inconsistent with the purposes of the United Nations. UnderArticle V of the Treaty, they pledge to come to each others defence in exercise of the right of
individual or collective self-defence recognized by Article 51 of the Charter of the United
Nations. The Security Council is also equipped by Chapter VII of the UN Charter with the
power to legislate for all member countries, for example its post 9/11 decision to deny
terrorists access to the worlds financial system, a power that the self-appointed G-8 and G-20
do not (and should not) have.
The Councils writ covers peace and security, fairly broadly defined. Major international
political and security issues continue to be brought to the UN for deliberation and decision
where possible and for surveillance and management where solutions are not possible. For
example, the US successfully sought Security Council authorization in 2001 to use militaryforce in Afghanistan in response to 9/11 and again in 2011 in Libya, but was denied
authorization by the Council in 2003 to use military force to topple Saddam Husseins regime
in Baghdad. The Israeli-Lebanese war of 2006 was brought to the Council for a diplomatic
conclusion. Further, the international sanctions in response to the alleged Iranian nuclear
weapons program are currently coordinated in the Council. There are literally dozens of less
high-profile issues on the Councils docket.
There is no prospect that the G-20, operating at leaders level, or even at foreign ministers
level, will supplant the Council. The five permanent members of the Security Council are
unlikely in the extreme to acquiesce in any sort of formal encroachment by the G-20 onto
Council turf and in doing so to undermine their own privileged positions there. The Council is
too valuable to them, and taking on its burdens would be too time-consuming and impracticalfor leaders.
There is, though, a strong argument for the G-20 members to invest greater effort in making
the Council work better. G-20 leaders could, for example, debate certain issues among
themselves and import whatever consensus they can reach into the Council via their Permanent
Representatives, as the G-8 did to end the Kosovo war in 1999. G-20 members could also
participate more actively in Council-sanctioned, UN-led military missions. Participation by
G-20 countries, including Canada, would upgrade the UNs capacity to act effectively. G-20
leaders could also inject high-level political energy periodically into issues of surpassing
importance, as Obama did in 2009 in chairing a Security Council session devoted to arms
control and disarmament.
One issue on which the G-20 could make a major contribution is reform of the UN Security
Council, specifically the number and composition of permanent seats. For a generation,
member states of the UN have endeavored vainly to revamp Council membership. Several
emerging market countrieswho are members of the G-20see themselves as entitled to
permanent Security Council seats by virtue of their significant and growing standing in
international relations. Further, neither Africa nor Latin America has a permanent seat on the
Council, whereas Europe has two permanent seats, three counting Russia. For the aspirant
countries, a Council that does not reflect contemporary power realities is unrepresentative and
illegitimate. Worse, it is ineffective and their solution is to enlarge the Council to include
themselves as permanent members.
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Others do not equate enlargement with reform and regard the whole idea of permanency with
distrust. Some opponents of an increase of permanent seats cite the cases of Darfur, Rwanda,
Srebrenica, etc., to argue that the Council has a performance deficit more than a
representational deficit. They contend that more members do not necessarily increase the
Councils effectiveness, and that permanency is in any case incompatible with accountability.
Further, opponents of adding permanent seats, including Canada, favour democratic, electoralpractices over autarchic, anachronistic privilege.
Resolving the issue of permanent seats is important because the role of the Council is
important. The G-20 might well be in a position to assist the reform process in the coming
months and years, as all the main protagonists are members of the G-20 and in some respects
are the economic equivalent of the Security Council. It should be possible for experienced
leaders for whom compromise and politics as the art of the possible are everyday realities to
find practical political accommodations.
It happens that there is a potentially useful overlap between the G-20 and the Security Council
in the next period. Ten G-20 members (six G-8 members) will be on the Council in 2011, as
will five of the leading six aspirants for permanent Council membership. While the overlapmight lessen the perceived need for the G-20 to address political issues, it also presents an
opportunity that might not come soon again to solve this chronic problem. Whether the G-20
wishes to seize it remains to be seen.
The G-20 and Climate Change39
The leaders G-20 was created to deal with the last economic crisis. The next economic crisis
might well be driven by an inadequate global response to climate change. Preventing climate
change, the mother of all tragedies of the commons, was never going to be easy. There are only
a few examples in modern history of humanity coming together in its own enlightened self-
interest to change its collective course on a major governance issue: World War III has been
avoided (so far), the widespread proliferation of nuclear weapons has (largely) been averted
and the ozone layer has been (mostly) preserved.
For climate change, as for most over-arching global issues, the crucial negotiations have
usually taken place in the back rooms of large gatherings, among groups of 20 or so of the
most engaged countries. In the Copenhagen conference in November 2009, even that process
was bypassed as five countriesthe US, China, Brazil, India and South Africa, some of the
worst polluterscut a deal among themselves that they then offered to others on a takeit-
orleave-it basis.
The Copenhagen solution, however, was inadequate substantively and unfair procedurally.
While it had some meritmore than 70 countries including 35 developing countries signed on
to the deal and pledged to take nationally appropriate actionsit lacked targets and timetables
and it back-end loaded its promises of financial assistance to poorer countries harmed by a
problem the richer countries created. Further, G-20 members from the EU and Japan, South
Korea, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Australia, Turkey, Indonesia and Russia were sidelined from the
backroom negotiations as was Canada, itself a significant generator of greenhouse gases
(GHG) and the leading foreign supplier of oil, gas, electricity and uranium to the worst GHG
emitter, the US. Nor were the innocent victims represented.
39For a fuller treatment of the G-20 and climate change, see Barry Carin, PhD, Senior Fellow, Centre for International
Governance innovation, Can the G-20 Save the Environment? Centre for International Governance Innovation,
prepared for The School of Public Policy, April 2010.
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More progress was made at Cancun, Mexico in November 2010 (after Copenhagen, the bar
was set low) and a more constructive, even hopeful tone was established for subsequent
negotiations. United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres called it a new beginningnot what is ultimately
required but [an] essential foundation on which to build greater, collective ambition.40
Nevertheless, in the absence of any prospect of progress in the US Congress on climatechange, much had to be kicked down the road to Durban in the fall of 2011 and likely beyond
the next US presidential and congressional elections in 2012.
Agreement by all 192 members of the United Nations, while essential, remains elusive.
Negotiations have been too unwieldy and complex, too hampered by politics and contradictory
ideologies and too vulnerable to the actions of a handful of spoilers to be able to reconcile
competing interests and conclude an effective omnibus global treaty. Partly in frustration with
the difficulty of making progress while emissions grow and the climate change clock ticks,
negotiators have in some cases sought to reach agreement on those discrete parts of the
problem on which agreement is achievable.
World Bank President Richard Zoellick encapsulated the challenge when he called for
reaching real results on the ground while at the same time working on overall international
regimes and arrangements, and not letting the perfect be the enemy of the good. 41 A notable
accomplishment at Cancun in this respect was agreement to create a programReducing
Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD)that uses market and financial
incentives to reduce GHG emissions from deforestation and forest degradation. Elsewhere,
coalitions of the willing have been turning to bottom-up actions on a national and regional
basis, although that course risks making the world a crazy quilt of incompatible regulations and
trade protectionism masquerading as climate sensitivity.
Whether the solution is to be an over-arching mega-deal or a series of internationally
sanctioned regional or issue-specific deals, the world has to be brought to act. The G-20 is, by
its own declaration, the worlds premier economic forum, and climate change mitigation and
adaptation raise primordial economic issues, including the probability that not acting promptly
is going to be more costly for all than acting promptly would be, as British economist Nicholas
Stern has persuasively argued.42
It would make sense for climate change, starting perhaps with its economic and development
dimensions, to be put on the G-20 agenda. Given the fundamental disagreements that continue to
bedevil progress, particularly over who bears the major responsibility for creating the problem
and on whom it is incumbent to act first and do most to fix it, as well as the reluctance of the
American Congress to acknowledge US responsibility and support the president on this issue,
miracles will not happen. But the greater the extent to which the G-20 can narrow differencesbetween themselves on principles and import some consensus into the necessarily larger UN
negotiating framework, the more likely it is for progress on climate change to be made.
40UN Climate Change Conference in Cancn delivers balanced package of decisions, restores faith in multilateral
process Press Release, (Cancn, 11 December 2010
41Robert B. Zoellick, President, World Bank Group, Transcript of Remarks at Cancun Summit on REDD+, December
7, 2010.
42See Nicholas Stern, The Global Deal: Climate Change and the Creation of a New Era of Progress and Prosperity,
Public Affairs/Perseus Books Group, 2009. See p 90 ff.
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The G-20 and the UN: Neither Is Sufficient, Both Are Necessary
The UN remains a necessary but not sufficient response to globalization, as is the G-20. The
inescapable conclusion is that there is room and need for both the UN and the G-20, and for
cooperation between them. Effective global governance depends considerably on the success of
both the nascent G-20 and of the sexagenarian UN.
The UN embodies universality and the G-20 efficacy. Together, they can produce synergies,
with the G-20 strengthening the UN by reducing the gaps among the major powers on
contentious issues, making decision-making in the world body easier and more effective, with
the UN returning the favour by extending the G-20s effectiveness vis--vis the G-172, a group
that the G-20 cannot command but whose cooperation it does need. The UN, for its part, needs
to be sensibly responsive and strategically savvy, resisting the blandishments of its ideological
spoilers. And the G-20 needs to take the initiative to develop an effective modus operandi
with non-members of the group to resolve legitimate issues of inclusion and exclusion, find a
way to give voice in its deliberations to the less powerful poorer countries and to the small but
very competent richer ones.
The G-20, International Security and Asia
The G-20 has not given itself a direct security mandate. Its effectiveness in bringing better
governance to the global economy and increased oversight to the international financial system
will, nonetheless, be beneficial in security terms in a world in which GDP is as good or better
an indicator of power and influence as military capability, and also a more urgent and less
dangerous subject of contention. Further, to the extent the G-20 is successful in promoting an
environment of trust in which all acquire habits of cooperation, there will be spillovers into
security relations, reducing frictions between its members and facilitating problem solving, as
has been the case in the past between Russia and the r